A two-piece collapsible carrier for food and beverages. The lower carrier has a bottom and four side walls particularly adapted to carrier beverages in different sized containers. The side walls have uppermost edges higher than the tallest beverage containers to be normally carried. An upper food top having a bottom and side walls is carried over said lower carrier with the bottom of said upper tray resting on the uppermost edges of said lower carrier so that in normal use, the attitudes of the tray and beverage carrier remain the same.
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16. A carrier for beverage containers and food, comprising:
a lower beverage carrier having a bottom and side walls, said side walls having uppermost edges above the tops of the tallest of said beverage containers; and an upper food carrier having a bottom and side walls, said upper food carrier placed over the lower beverage carrier with the bottom of said upper food carrier supported by said uppermost edges of said lower carrier, wherein said lower carrier has an integral handle formed from two attached layers of said cut sheet.
1. A carrier for beverage containers and food, comprising:
a lower beverage carrier having a bottom and side walls, said side walls having uppermost edges above the tops of the tallest of said beverage containers; and an upper food carrier having a bottom and side walls, said upper food carrier adapted to be positioned over the lower beverage carrier with the bottom of said upper food carrier supported by said uppermost edges of said lower carrier, wherein the area of the bottom of the upper food carrier is greater than the area of the bottom of the lower beverage carrier, and wherein said bottom is formed by four interlocking flaps respectively integral with said side walls.
19. A carrier for beverage containers and food, comprising:
a lower beverage carrier having a bottom and side walls, said side walls having uppermost edges above the tops of the tallest of said beverage containers; and an upper food carrier having a bottom and side walls, said upper food carrier placed over the lower beverage carrier with the bottom of said upper food carrier supported by said uppermost edges of said lower carrier, wherein said lower carrier has a bottom and a plurality of compartments adopted to hold beverage containers of various sizes, wherein a series of parallel slots are cut in adjacent side walls of the lower carrier to form a cup restraint strap in at least one of said compartments.
20. A carrier for beverage containers and food, comprising:
a lower beverage carrier having a bottom and side walls, said side walls having uppermost edges above the tops of the tallest of said beverage containers; and an upper food carrier having a bottom and side walls, said upper food carrier placed over the lower beverage carrier with the bottom of said upper food carrier supported by said uppermost edges of said lower carrier, wherein said lower carrier has a bottom and a plurality of compartments adopted to hold beverage containers of various sizes wherein an inverted generally trapezoidal-shaped slot is cut in adjacent side walls of the lower carrier to form a cup restraint flap in at least one of said compartments.
21. A carrier for beverage containers and food, comprising:
a lower beverage carrier having a bottom and side walls, said side walls having uppermost edges above the tops of the tallest of said beverage containers; and an upper food carrier having a bottom and side walls, said upper food carrier adapted to be positioned over the lower beverage carrier with the bottom of said upper food carrier supported by said uppermost edges of said lower carrier, wherein the area of the bottom of the upper food carrier is greater than the area of the bottom of the lower beverage carrier, wherein said lower carrier is formed from only a single cut sheet of material which is manufactured in a collapsed state which is substantially five times the thickness of said sheet of material.
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This continuation application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/214,267 filed Jun. 26, 2000, entitled "Beverage And Food Carrier" and U.S. application Ser. No. 09/893,361 filed on Jun. 26, 2001 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,443,308.
The preferred embodiments of this invention relate to inexpensive, disposable carriers for beverages, food and other items.
The prior art includes a number of patents that show carriers for food and beverages. Representative prior art carriers are described in the Hunter U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,738,217 and 5,927,502. Although the carriers described in these patents are improvements over other carriers, the Hunter carriers have several significant deficiencies. Thus, cups of various sizes are not easily carried since the Hunter carriers are not designed to carry beverage containers of various sizes and shapes. The Hunter carriers are bottomless so that the beverage cups necessarily touch the stadium ground or floor when the carrier is placed on the ground or floor. And, the Hunter carriers do not insure that the attitude of the food tray remains horizontal. Rather, upward movement of the beverage cups tend to tilt the tray, especially if cups of different sizes are used or the cups are not uniformly distributed in the carrier.
The preferred embodiments of this invention provide an inexpensive beverage and food carrier having a wide variety of uses. One particular use is in ballparks or stadium to carry food from a food and drink stand to one's seat. A particular feature of this preferred embodiment is that beverage containers of different sizes may be conveniently carried. Thus, the preferred embodiments include a two-piece carrier, formed from only two pieces of cardboard, a lower carrier having a carrying handle and an upper tray for food and like items.
The beverage containers rest upon a bottom provided by four interlocking cardboard flaps. These beverage cups and containers, be they foam, paper, plastic, round, square or otherwise, are thus protected by the carrier bottom from touching the stadium floor. The upper food tray slides over the handle and rests upon the top edges of the side walls forming the lower container.
In the preferred embodiments, the side walls extend upwardly from the container floor higher than the height of the beverage containers, with their top edges supporting the bottom of the food tray. As a result, the attitude of tray is maintained parallel to the beverage carrier.
Another significant advantage of carriers constructed in accordance with the preferred embodiments of this invention is that the carrier as constructed is collapsed for convenient shipping and storing and quickly and easily assembled at the ballpark or football stadium. The collapsed carrier is advantageously only five times the thickness of the sheet of cut material used to form the carrier.
One preferred embodiment of the food and drink carrier constructed in accordance with this invention is shown in FIG. 13 and includes a lower beverage carrier 25 for holding paper or plastic cups or other containers of beverage and an upper food tray 30 supported on the uppermost edges of the outside walls. In the embodiment shown in the figures, the lower carrier has, as best seen in
A feature of this invention is that the lower carrier is adapted to carry any shape or configuration of beverage container normally sold in ball parks and stadiums. Further, although the embodiment shown provides four pockets 35, it will be apparent that the bottom carrier can be constructed to have fewer or greater number of pockets.
As discussed below and as shown in
The beverage carrier 25 advantageously includes a bottom floor 49 under each of the pockets 35. This floor is provided by four interlocking bottom flaps.
The lower beverage carrier further includes an integral flat, generally rectangular handle 50 advantageously formed by two thickness of the same cardboard or other sheet material used to construct the lower carrier 25. An elongate opening 55 allows some of the fingers of one hand to pass through this opening 55 to more easily carry the beverage and food container.
The upper food tray 30, best shown in
A significant feature of the preferred embodiments of this invention is that the upper food tray 30 is slid down over handle 50 until it rests on the uppermost top edges of the side walls 45, 46, 47 and 48 (see FIGS. 13 and 16). In this manner, the attitude of tray 30 is maintained horizontal with respect to the beverage carrier 25 and is not affected by the height, distribution or quantity of the beverage cups placed in the pockets 35. Moreover, in the preferred embodiments, the bottoms of the beverage cups advantageously rest on the floor 49 of the lower beverage container. As a result, placing a filled carrier 25 on the floor or seat of a stadium has no effect on the positions of either the beverage containers 40 inside the pockets 35 or the attitude of the tray 30.
Advantageously, the lower beverage carrier 25 and upper food tray 30 are each cut from a single sheet of suitable cardboard. See
Referring to
Wall section 46 is then held flat and wall section 47 is folded upwardly along line 120 with respect to wall section 46 to form a crease along line 120. Likewise, a second pocket divider member 122 is folded upwardly with respect to wall section 46 along line 124, but is folded downwardly with respect to the second handle section 126 along line 128 leaving creases along lines 124 and 128. In addition, end tab 130 is folded upwardly with respect to section 46 along line 132. The end tab 130 is also folded with respect to handle section 126 along line 134 such that the end tab portion 138 is raised upwardly with respect to handle section 126 so that the connector 122 and end tab 130 lie in parallel planes with creases formed along lines 132 and 134.
Attached to wall sections 45, 48, 47 and 46 are respective bottom flaps 140, 142, 144 and 146. Each of these flaps are folded upwardly with respect to wall section 45, 48, and 47 along respective lines 150, 152, 154 and 156 to form creases along these lines.
Bottom flap 142 includes a corner tab portion 160 which is folded downwardly with respect to the remainder of flap 142 along line 162. Similarly, bottom flap 146 includes a corner tab portion 164 which is also folded downwardly with respect to the remainder of flap 146 along line 166 with creases left along lines 162, 166.
The lower container is advantageously manufactured in a collapsed configuration as follows: the sections 45, 48, 47 and 46 are folded along creases 104, 116, 120 and 124 to form the outside walls of the container. The downwardly facing side of handle section 126 is joined by a suitable glue or adhesive to the upwardly facing side of the handle section 110 wall. The downwardly facing side of end tab 130 is secured by glue or adhesive to the upwardly facing side of section 45. The upwardly facing surface of tab 160 is joined by glue or adhesive to the downwardly facing side of flap 140. The upwardly facing surface of tab 164 is joined to the downwardly facing side of flap 144.
A significant feature of the construction of the bottom flaps 140, 142, 144 and 146 is that when the carrier is erected into the configuration shown in
The functionality of the foldable carrier is further enhanced by the creases 150, 152, 154, 156, 162 and 166 which bias the bottom surface upward 49 when the carrier is open. As a result, the weight carrying capacity of the carrier is more than ample for all of the drinks that can be held within the carrier.
Another feature shown in
The upper food tray 30 is also advantageously cut from a sheet of cardboard in the manner shown in FIG. 15. The downwardly facing sides of end tabs 200, 202, 204 and 206 are respectively glued to the upwardly facing sides of foldable portions 210, 212, 214 and 216. As a result, this food tray is easily manufactured in a collapsed state as shown in
After the beverages are placed within the lower carrier 25, the tray slot 61 is easily slipped over the handle 50 until the tray is supported by the top edges of the four walls of the lower carrier as shown in
The floor of 60 tray 30 is thus retained horizontal with respect to the floor 49 of the beverage carrier 25 by the top edges of the side walls 45, 46, 47 and 48, so that there is no risk of food spilling out on the ground when the lower carrier is set on the ground.
Another preferred embodiment of the food and drink carrier constructed in accordance with this invention is shown in
As shown in
Another feature of the lower beverage carrier shown in
It will be apparent that additional flaps 410 can be provided by cutting additional inverted trapezoid-shaped cuts in other adjacent panels.
The preferred embodiments of beverage and food carriers of the invention are manufactured from single sheets of cardboard. Suitable cardboard sheets are available in a range of thickness, an exemplary range of thicknesses being 0.016 to 0.028 inches. Thinner thicknesses are normally advantageously used for the upper food tray in which lighter loads are normally carried whereas thicknesses of 0.020 to 0.028 are typically used for the lower beverage carrier for carrying the heavier beverage containers. Typical kinds of cardboard sheets useful for constructing the upper and lower carriers including:
1. Plain Chip or Uncoated;
2. Clay coated for enhanced printing of advertising, coupons, and the like on the surfaces of the containers; and
3. Water resistant coated to provide substantial wet strength to carry spilled and leaking beverage containers.
4. By way of specific example, Riverwood International manufactures such uncoated and coated cardboard sheets under the respective trademarks Kraftsmaster®, Omni-Kote®, Pearl-Kote® and Aqua-Kote®.
The food and beverage containers constructed in accordance with the preferred embodiments of the invention have several significant advantages including:
1. The container is manufactured and shipped collapsed and quickly and easily assembled at the ballpark or football stadium. The collapsed carrier (see e.g.
2. The bottom of the beverage containers 40 carried by the carrier are supported by the bottom interlocked flaps of the carrier and are not disturbed when the beverage and food carrier is set on the ground. The beverages are thus protected when the carrier is set on the floor or ground.
3. The upper and lower portions of the food and drink carrier are inexpensively formed from single sheets of cardboard.
In addition to providing a very simple and inexpensive way to manufacture in volume a very useful food and beverage carrier, the preferred embodiments of the invention facilitate the selling of advertising space since the advertising copy can be simply printed on the sheets of
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